Michael Roberts conveying Senaka Weeraratna’s Latest Protest concerning DRS
SENAKA is not backward in presenting his demand again and again. Here he deploys one “Roberts” in his support. However let me stress that I am NOT an authority on the topic and that my decliining memories at this stage in my life renders me an unreliable foundation for this topic. I suspect that this will NOT prevent Senaka from beating this drum ….. over and over again …. maybe even to the point of self-defeating repetition!
SENAKA’s POST
The Core of the Claim
- The Concept: Sri Lankan lawyer Senaka Weeraratna first proposed the “Player Referral” system in a letter to The Australian newspaper on March 25, 1997.
- The Legal Analogy: He used his legal background to argue that, like dissatisfied litigants in a court of law, players should have an appellate right to challenge a “trial” decision made by an on-field umpire.
- Breaking Tradition: This concept shattered cricket’s absolute, centuries-old sacred tenet: “the umpire’s word is final”. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
Michael Roberts’ Perspective
Historian and author Michael Roberts, writing as editor of Thuppahi, has highlighted that Weeraratna’s formulation was the first time in world sports history that a structured case was built around empowering the players themselves to trigger a technological review. While the International Cricket Council (ICC) had allowed umpires to initiate TV replays since 1992, Weeraratna’s design uniquely shifted the agency of appeal directly to the players. [1, 2, 3]
Global Legacy
The four pillars of Weeraratna’s 1997 blueprint—the direct right of appeal, the third umpire acting as an appellate judge, a strict limit on unsuccessful reviews, and utilizing technology to correct human errors—formed the direct basis of what the ICC officially implemented as the Decision Review System (DRS) in 2008–2009. This player-led review logic has since replicated across world sports, serving as the foundational philosophy behind VAR in football, challenge systems in tennis, and review protocols in rugby. [1, 4]
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